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Re: FSF : lackeys of their corporate masters


From: Alexander Terekhov
Subject: Re: FSF : lackeys of their corporate masters
Date: Mon, 10 May 2004 12:39:51 +0200

Alexander Terekhov wrote:
[...]
> > That's one of the reasons.  See the essays on LGPL versus GPL,
> > where the FSF says that libraries such as readline are intentionally GPL
> > because that induces other people to make *their* work GPL so that
> > they can take advantage of GPL.
> 
> FSF's theory of derivative works is total crap. Expansive FSF's
> claims are barred by the doctrine of copyright misuse and the
> doctrine of first sale.

<Forward Inline, I need groups.google link for future references>

-------- Original Message --------
Message-ID: <409F50A5.FCE352D7@terekhov.de>
To: debian-legal@lists.debian.org
Subject: Re: reiser4 non-free?

Richard Stallman wrote:
> 
> You are focusing on the definition of "derived work", but that is not
> really the issue.  Copyright also covers use of a work as part of a
> larger combined work.

Your silly claims like "If a.o is under the GPL and talks to b.o 
which talks to c.o, the GPL covers all three files, if all three 
are combined" are barred by the doctrine of copyright misuse and
the doctrine of first sale. C'mon, give it up and stop bluffing.
You're on record:

http://slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=00/05/01/1052216&mode=nocomment

"RMS: We have no say in what is considered a derivative work. That 
 is a matter of copyright law, decided by courts. When copyright 
 law holds that a certain thing is not a derivative of our work, 
 then our license for that work does not apply to it. Whatever our 
 licenses say, they are operative only for works that are 
 derivative of our code. 

 A license can say that we will treat a certain kind of work as if 
 it were not derivative, even if the courts think it is. The Lesser 
 GPL does this in certain cases, in effect declining to use some 
 of the power that the courts would give us. But we cannot tell the 
 courts to treat a certain kind of work as if it were derivative, 
 if the courts think it is not."

Or is this yet another case of "fabricated responses"? <chuckles>

http://xfree86.org/pipermail/forum/2004-March/004301.html
http://xfree86.org/pipermail/forum/2004-April/004306.html
http://xfree86.org/pipermail/forum/2004-April/004308.html
http://xfree86.org/pipermail/forum/2004-April/004309.html
http://xfree86.org/pipermail/forum/2004-April/004321.html
http://xfree86.org/pipermail/forum/2004-April/004353.html
http://xfree86.org/pipermail/forum/2004-April/004358.html
http://xfree86.org/pipermail/forum/2004-April/004384.html

regards,
alexander.

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